It is curious that the world has yet to be convinced that women do not love to work any better than men do. They are credit- ed with dependence, with a love of ease and luxury, and yet when a. salaried position is in question the women has to take less be- cause “she needs less.†1 I,,, A†,Lucu‘ 10 w u“. ... can wholly eliminate. he best rule A A r pnton an expression or very nniu uisiam with meut in]. as though you took it in un- rler protest. Don‘t overdo this, and look as though siukeneil, but just elevate the brows ll trifle, Hnile fiintly. and try to give the im- pression that you tolerate a fried oyster. but do not hawker at or it. I watched a. slender, grimeful. :L gel-faced creature in a fashion- ahle oyster house the other night, and new by neglerting her department she was shock- ing the fellow norm“ the table. Perhaps She (lixln’t care whether he adored her or not. Anyhow, she “as putting the oyatei‘s into her month by halves, chewing them with umlisgziise l gus o. swallowing plenty of ‘ brood aml «ant cabbage along with them, and 3 taking in) 11mins whatevertmlisguise the fact 1 that she wu- mijoying them mightily. At ‘ the next t il,lu rat a thicker and older wo- man, who practiced the art of oyster eating as I have indie-ital it. Her f cial expression ‘ was clever. She slippe-l in the food in big pieces when her (mnipani0n wasn‘t looking. and nibblcd when h»: was looking. She got away with a hearty meal without appearing to have taken anything to speak of, and it was only the empty plates that revealed the fact. She was not less skilful in drinking hcr half of a quart of champagne. The glass was lifted to her lips like the hand of a queen to kiss ; her mouth shut over barely an inch of the brim ; there was no slopping or gurgling ; the wine ti'inkled neatly down her threat, but With quite suflicient Clttl’lty. When starting to go out, with considerable of the fluid etfervescing in her brain, she failed for a dreamy instant to recognize her reflection in a full length mirror, and tried to turn out to let herself pass herself. The blunder was seen by nobody but me. She recovered her equaniinity instantly, and departed as smoothly as '1 fairy. A--4im>eonâ€"â€"â€"â€"-â€"â€"â€"- inrAOo <<O~ > topâ€"â€" An Ingenious Clo ck. A very ingenious electric clock, for use in railway stations, has recently been exhibited Mu" nu‘ 04:" railway ELIAuuua, 1mm Lhuvnnunl NVâ€. “NH ,, , in Heston. It gives automatically the sig- nals for starting trains at the proper time, and it is automatically regulated at noon each day by electric impulse from some as‘ tronomical station. Though the details of the apparatus are rather complicated, the principle is simrle. The mechanism for giving the signals shows two discuss, each pierced with 1440 holes, arranged in spirals of 24 turns, with 60 holes in each turn. small metallic pegs are inserted in the holes corresponding to any given minute and hour, and the contact Eof these with an electric conductor allows passage of the current for the signal. \Vhen any change is made in the time for starting trains the pegs are shifted. One, two, three, or more success- ive or different signals can be given for each train. It is proposed to connect all the stations of a railway with the main ofï¬ce, so that signals for starting traim will be given from a. single apparatus. â€"â€"â€"â€"‘â€<o>ooâ€"’â€"â€"â€" Some First Things. The ï¬rst lueifer match was made in 1727.8, and the wind rose to a gale the instant it was scratched. The ï¬rst horse railroad was started in 1826, and the conductors had forty-ï¬ve years the start of the bell-punch. Kerosgne was ï¬rst used for illuminating in 1826. Its servant-girl blasting proper- ties were discovered at live o’clock the next morning. H The ï¬rst temperance society in this coun- try was organized at Saratoga in 1826. The opposition secured a foothold in 1492. r. Glass windows were introduced in Eng- land in the eighth century. The little boys of the seventh century had no object in throwing stones at unoccupied buildings. The ï¬rst newspaper tdvertisemcnt appear- ed in 1652, and it has taken just; 231 years to convince some business men that it is a good investment. TOPICS FOR WOMEN. Why _Wome :1 Work. The World of Notables-Eminent People, Princes. Peers, and Others. The son of Anthony Trollope is to publish the autobiography which he left. A hundre-d :1th ï¬ve cows are on the dairy farm of the Prince of Wales at Sandringham. The parents of the English‘l’ostmaster- General celebrated their golden wedding lately. The Duke of Campo-Medina has bought the late Henri Vieuxtempt’s tollection of violins and bows. Sixty-ï¬ve trunks are all the baggage the Princess Louise carries when travelling , but it comprises the luggage of her suite as well as her own. Five thousand dollars havebeen left to chil dren deserted by their parents in Paris by the late Louis Blane. Neuralgia is the [mic noirc of Bismarck, he being obiged to stop in the midst. of a sentence sometimes, while speaking, an ac- count of it. Fifteen languages were spoken by the, woolbroker of Philadelphia, Thomas Wilson, who committed suicide the other day at Niagara Falls. A paper on “ Temperance†was lately read before a religious society of Providence, Rhode Island, by Miss Alice Stone Black- well. Mr. Dennis, the British antiquarian, has bought the site of the temple of Sardis, Asia. Minor, and great hopes are entertained of the discoveries among the ruins. The Duchess of Sutherland, the Duchess of Westminster, Lady Mount Temple, the Countess Brownlow, and the Countess Elles- mere all wear the temperance blue ribbon. Dr. 0. W. Holmes says that, much as he has heard of the roots of the tongue, and although he has taught anatomy for thirty- ï¬ve years he has been unable to ï¬nd them. Gambetta. had an eye glass, and always refused to have a full picture taken, pre- ferring to pose in proï¬le. Mr. Healy’s por- trait of him is thought to be the best one in existence. The young secretary of the Chinese Minis- ter at \Vashington, being asked at an after- noon tea. if he would take one or two lumps of sugar in his tea, answered, “No sugar, no cream, one spoon.†The Sultan onunzibar became so infatu- ated with strawberry ice-cream and pen- dulum clocks While on his visit to Paris that he has secured an expert confectioner and watchmaker as part of his retinue. The Shah of Persia, the North American chiefs, the New Zealand chiefs, Catywayo, and the “Indian contingent†have all de- clared that the most wonderful thing in England is the Crystal Palace. The Postmaster-General of England, Mr. Fawcett, is entirely blind ; the Receiver and Accounmnt-G-aneml to the Post-Ofï¬ce, Mr. George Richardson, is entirely deaf ; and an ofï¬cial in the Admiralty is both deaf and dumb. Mr. Andrew Carnegie, of New York, a. native of Dumferline, N. 13., has given twenty~ï¬ve thousand dollars toward the fund for the London College of Music, which has been acknnwledged by the Prince of Wales with cordiality. “"hen the Chinese Emperor Quang-Su saw the comet he sent for the Astronomer Royal, who told him that it meant the gods Were displeased with the Ministers of VVor- ship and Public Instruction and the ‘minis~ ters received their letters of dismissal a few hours later. A proposal by some native gentlemen of Bombay to provide a. guarantee fund by means of which qualiï¬ed medical women may begin practice in India has been ap- proved by Queen Victoria in spite of her dis- likeof the female practitioner in Great Bri- min. Mr. ’J‘revelyan han discovered that the people in the west of Ireland are living on sea-weed rather than go to tho workhouses provided. He has held that they only pre- tended to be starvingflmt it appears as though unless relieved they Wlll carry the deception so far as really to die. M. About has subscribed largely for the aSsistance of the victims of the inundatinns in Alsace, where he lived till the occupation of the Germans. Last year he introduced into society his young daughter Mlle. Valentine, who has simrlicity of disposition and solid mental gifts. A series of illustrations to Poe’s “ Raven’ was ï¬nished by Dore before his death, which it is thought will rank among the most original results of his genius. They are owned by Messrs. Harper & Brothers, and will be published as a companion vol- ume to their edition cf the Ancient Mariner with the Dore plates. The Hon. D. L. Macpherson, Speaker of the Canadian Parliament. has by ordering the chair occupied at one time by the Princess Louxse to be cut down and used for the Speker’s chair, roused the ire of the Cana- dians, who would like the chair to be placed in the Historical Museum rather than in the private house of the Speaker, who has the right to take the chair used by him as his own personal property. Mr. William Grey, who is the heir pre- sumptive to the Earl of Stamford, and will, on coming to full inheritance, have an in‘ come of fcur hundred thousand dollars a year, is a. grandson of the naturalist Gil- bert White of Selhourne. The grandfather of lthe late Earl of Stamford, owned the Whole borough of Ashton-under-Lyne, and held all the freehold with the exception of one cottage for which he offered as many sovereigns as would cover the roof. “No, friend Grey,†said the old Quaker who own- ed it, “ Ashton-under-Lyne belongs to me and thee. You can’t have it all.†Deal very gently with those who are on the downhill of life. Your own time is coming to be where they now are. You too are “step- ping westward.†Soothe the restlessness of age by amusement, by consideration, by non- interference, and by allowing plenty of occu- pation to fall into the hands that long for it. But let it be of their own choosing. and cease to order their ways for them as though they were children. The greatest friend of truth is time 2 her greatest enemy is prejudice ; and her con- stant companion is humility. PERSONALITIES. [fliowl were "spoken by the, Miss Gordon Cumming has Written a nar ' rative of her tour among the volcanic lakes and craters of the main Island of Hawaii. Of these extraordinary and ï¬ery scenes she gives us some admirable sketches, less beau- : tiful indeed than her exquisite views of the Tahitian peaks, but unsurpassed in their 1 way for weird sublimity and awe-inspiring ' ' grandeur. Among the ever-varying crags and shifth :pools of the Lake of Fire on, Kitancs, Milton’s poetic fancies seem almost to have taken actual shape. The boiling mass never twice presents the same aspect ; a sometimes the Lake disappears altogether; for a while ;sometimes it lies sleeping in. . the centre of deep solid cliffs ; sometimes, ' ‘ again, it seethes and foams against enor- ‘ mous temporary pinnacles of hardened lava. ; Even the apparently rocky surface on which the visitor stands to look down into ’ the mountain pool is but the thinnest and ' most brittle crust, bridging: over the treach- ' erous mass ot subterranean ï¬re. Miss' Cumming was fortunate enough, too, to happen upon the exact moment of an erup- tion, and to see rivers of inflmdescent lava ' break out over the bed of the great crater, which, when she ï¬rst arrived, lay cold and ‘ grey within the circling cliffs, so that she : could walk across it without serious danger. ‘ She also csme in for an earthquake, Some , of the curious cu -sha ed vents in the ex- 1 tinct crater of Ha cake a remind one strong- ‘ ly of the lesser craters in the moon; and indeed the whole of this very dry and ver- ' dureless Hawaiian mountain district must _. closely resemble lunar scenery; only, as '. Miss Cumming rightly notes, the immense- ; well-like depth of the moon’s crater at once distinguishes them from anything of the? sort to be seen on the surface of our planet. Copernicus, the ï¬nest in shape ‘ among the lunar heights, is 12,000 feet deep - in the central pit, and Gassendi is 9,600. Still, the general effect of Miss Cumming’s sketches is ridiculously like that obtained from a. View of the moon through a powerful . telescope. In both weset the naked result of . volcanic energies, unaffected by the dis-_ integrating influences of vegetation or of humid atmospheric changes. . . . King .‘ Kalakaua was lately compelled to make a . tour of the world. It appears that the ' King’s ï¬rst care on his return to his de- cadent little realm was to build a new cathedral, to com lete and furnish his own palace, and to ma e preparations on a grand scale for the coronation of himself and his Queenâ€"the throne and crowns to be im orted from Paris, and all the ladies of onolulu to appear in sweeping trains and full Court dress as worn at Buckingham Palace. If this is all the good that semi- barbarous chiefs obtain from a tour in Eur- ope, it would be much better that they should stay at home.â€"-â€"Pall Hall Gazette. MOHW‘ 21ԠA nindoo mamntlst. Babu Keshub Chunder Sun, the Bindoo religious reformer, whose visit to this coun- try Will not have been forgotten, hal writ- ten a. native drama, the ï¬rst re resentetion of which has been given Ca. outta with unusual eclat. The play, which is very longwlonger, but apparently more lively thana modern Drury Lime I’antomine-is deacribed by native critics as designed “to inculcate the purifying principles of reli- gion in the garb of hintrionic representa- tion.†The vices of “Young Bengal†are gone for in a. vividly effective style. A heavy drinking bout, the and results, the interposition Omaha police, the insanity of the hero’s wife, the anger of the virtuous father at the sight of the Brnhmo reforming preachers, the repentance of the here, the appearance of a. hermit, the tournament between Vice and Virtue, the reconciliation of all concerned, and the triumph of the Brahmo principles are all exhibited with great efleét. â€"â€"-â€"---n4«.’vu’vâ€"â€"-â€"â€"â€"- A Model Home. One of our exchanges has a. column head- ed “Our Home,†and at the top it gives an illustration which is supposed to represent that hallowed retreat. The husband and father is rggresented as reading a bread board ; the mother, dressed in a hunting dress with an oversklrt two feet longer than the dress proper. is reading a cigar box or e checker board ; and the rest of the fami- ly, some thirteen or fourteen souls, cluster around the table reading different kinds of things ; while a. daughter in one corner of the room is climbing up on the keyboard of a piano with her feet, and her face is wreath- ed in a. smile that wraps her rosebud mouth twice around her Grecian head and buries itself in her clustering hair. One ofthe boys has dropsy of thebrain,and his pants are too ‘ short. Another is trying with great difli- eulty to tie the cat’s tail around the table- i leg, and a little daughter is pouring the saw- ? dust Vitals out of a rag doll down a knot ‘ hole in the floor. It is a perfect picture of home contentment and perennial joy.â€"Lara i mic Boomerang. In King Boky-Yoky‘s Dominions. A Toothsome Morsel. This from the Madison (Wis.) Democrat, conveys its own moral :â€"Hold on ! We are cognizant of the fact that an aching tooth was last night cured by the application of St. Jacobs Oil. The young fellow got mad over his raging tooth in the ball room, and rushed straightway to a drug store where he applied the good old German Remedy ; in ten minutes the tcothache had gone. Petersburgh, Va.. produced an icicle so large that its fall killed a horse. Even clown South there is no scarcity and nothing to lament over. BRIGGS' GENUINE ELECTRIC 01L. Electricity feeds the brain and muscles: in a word, it is Nature's food, The Electric Oil possesses all the qualities that. it is possible to combine in a, medicine, thereby giving it awide ranze of application as am internal remedy for man and beast. The happiest results follow its use and in Nervous Diseases. such as Rheumatism, Neuralgia. and kindred diseases, it has no equal. J. N. Sutherland, Esq.: Dear Sinâ€"J 'have been for the past year suffering from “Sciatica.†1 was recommend- ed by a nei hbor to try, your cure “Rheuma- tine.†I di so. and am glad to say it complete‘ 1y cured me, and I can now thoroughly recom- mend it to any one suffering from the same complaint. Giving you the llberty to use this as your think ï¬t, I remain yours truly, 17 1') {‘1' 1Nk'l\UKTT\TI‘1 Mr, Clondening is aï¬inpï¬brv ï¬xing Tn Louth, about nine miles from St. Catharines. Thanks to a. Nevada. exchange for the iu~ formation that the cinnamon bear has no taste for cinnamon. We had supposed that they lived on it. StLCatharines, May 4th, 1882. I»4-->M¢ “1:1.†ï¬deJENDEiiI'I'NG, THE VVorld’s Dispensary and Invalid's Hotel, at Buffalo, N. Y., destroyed by ï¬re a year ago, is rebuilt and full of patients. For “Invahd’s Guide Book,†giving particu- lars and terms of treatment, address, with two stamps, WORLD'S DISI’ENSARY Assocm TION, Butfalo, N. Y. The air is so clear at Montclair, N. J. ,that you can stand on Eagle Rouk and detecbthe clam in a caldron of chowder at Coney Is- land. Young, middle-aged, or old men, suffering from nervous dcbility or kindred affections, should addrsss, With two stamps. for large treatise, VVORLD’S DISPENSARY MEDICAL ASSOCIATION, Buffalo, N. Y. The New York Legislature is grappling with the toy pistol.â€"Sa€i. Lake Tribune. This is good news I The pistol has invaria- bly proved fatal to its grappler.â€"â€"Bosto;¢ Post. A Secret The secret of beauty lies in pure blood and good health, without the one the other is impossible. Burdock Blood Bitters iS' the grand koy that unlocks all the secretions, opens the avenue to health by purifying and regulating all the organs to a proper action. It curesall Scrofulous Diseases, acts on the Biood, Liver, Kidneys, Skm and Bowels, and brings the bloom of health to the pallid cheek.“ 14 “From the manner in which some people spend their time, one would suppose they had a ninety years’ lease of life with two re- newed clauses embraced in it.†VEGETINE.~The great success of the VEGETIXE as a cleanser and puriï¬er of the blood is shown beyond a. doubt by the great numbers who have taken it, and received immediate relief, with such remarkable cures. Nothing will efface the stains on character picker than moneyrâ€"L’arrt/ord Sunday carnal. We congratulate you on your raise. â€"New York A'ews. For Throat and Lung Diseases, Bowel (:om plaims, Elm, It is truly a. marvel. The Oil. besides exciting appetite, promoting digestion and checking fermentation on the stomach, antidotes or counteracts the effect of uric acid, which pro~ duces rheumatism by destroying the oxalate and phosphate of lime in the bones, and the membranes inclosingjhejoints.‘ 1 ‘ Astory writerhas ï¬nished a sketch call- ed “Lifted Out of Herself.†I would be difï¬- cult tor Bernhardt to be treated in that way and have anything left. The Talent of Success. ls nothing more him doing well that which is to be done, do ing it promptly and at the right timeâ€"very simple essentials, but not too common in com- bination. This exactly expresses the qualities of that famous remedy for corns, Putnam's Painless Corn Extractor. It never fails to do the work well, does it promptly, and at the right place ; never hangs ï¬re like a loaded gun going ofl‘ at the wrong time; acts only on the parts afl‘eeted, and doing its work in the nice- st manner imaginable. Try Putnam‘s Corn Extractor. Beware of substitutes. N. C. Polâ€" son 8; 00.. Kingston, men’s. The woman who is Interwevel by a. sow- ing machine salesman suffers more 01' less from sewer gas. ulI:u|uqu\.u “MW... W. .,V. . Price 25 cents perotflo. kold by aï¬drug- gxsts. (Eclectric is not Electric.) Davy & Clank, Druggists, Renfrew, date of June 3rd, write,†Burdock Blood Bitters though comparatively a new preparation, has taken the lead in this locality as a blood puriï¬er, our sales of it being equal to that of all other medicines used for the purpose during the last war.†18, The Boston Transcript's musical critic characterizes Mr. Maas’ piano playing, as “eminently musicianly.†It is sorrowing- fully to see the English language maltreated- An Aflmomtmn. To negleï¬ a cough or cold, is; but to in Vite consumption, that destroyer of the human race. Hagyard’s Pectoral Balsam will cure the cough and allay all irritation of the bronchial tubes and lungs, and effectually remedy all pulmonary complaints. such as Asthma, Bronchitis, \Vhooping Cough, &c. 17 “ A. P.†114 Going to Manitoba. the Great North-West, Inlifornla, oregon, British Columbia, Dakota, Minnesota, or Nebraska. Can get Mam, Guides. and Descriptive Pamphlm F REE by enclosinga 3 cen$ stamp‘ null stating a! what part of the «nub: they wish Partinth Addnls, ‘ , wl R E WINDOW GUARDS, \VIEE CLOTH and Wire Goods at the Toronto Wire Works, 116 King St. Wigs}. T, G. RICE: ANITOBA FARMâ€"T0 AN ACTUAL Settler the north of sec. 1. Tp. 12 R. 29 W. is offered for $3.00 per acre. 6 years time. Soil the very best, only 2 miles Elkhorn Station. main line C. P. R. Apply to A. BOVVERMAN Bpx 49,)Vinnip_eg, 'or J. H. MACMULLEN 419 Yong}, Street. ‘Tour'onto. ORK FARMERS COLONY. N. \V. ’1‘. Free Homesteads with precmptions add- ed now open in this fertile tra,ct. For list of present settlersjmprovemcnts now oing onand full information address Head 0 ‘ce, 1 Vin toria. St., Toronto. Intending settlers wanted as agents. JAS. ARMSTRONG. Managing Director. iff$Sflï¬Â§iï¬ï¬ï¬ï¬ï¬ï¬ï¬fm ‘n‘onupmp from Russia ' perfectlylmrdy throughout Ontario ; bears when two years old, and so denselv as to exclude the leaves ; price, packed and delivered at railroad stationâ€"2 feet high, 60 cents; 3 to 4 feet; 750. ; suggly limited; orders booked in rotation as roceiv :also gmpcvines, 6both old and new varieties, at very low rates. Sand for price list. J. W. JOHN ."i‘ON,Ca.mp- belli‘ord Nurseries and Vineyard, Ontario â€" vâ€"_ CURES Bheumahsm, Neural 1a, Solatlca, Lumbngo, Backache, Headac e, Toothache, goreThroatSwelling.Spralnls,nl‘niscs, Burns. Senlds, Frost Bites, AND ALL OTHER BODILY PAIRS AND ACllEs. Sold by Druggis‘ul and Dealers ever where. Fifty Cents a bottle. Directions in 11 mnguages. TlIE CHARLES A. VOGELER cc. (Successor: to A. vouELxm a co.) Bnltlmoro. 31d“ 11. s W. 11. CALLLWAY. Manager. A". \Mâ€, (Successor: to Depufgylent offlmlmtion. ‘ W ’ 33 Y_o_rk Street, Toronto, \Vhen you Visit orleave New York City, save Baggage Expressnge and Carr 3 Hire, an stop at GRAND UNION HOTEL- .. "nsite Gran Central Dep 0L. 450018ganb m, 1 linked up at a cost of one million dollars, .ednced to :51 and upwards per day. European plan. Elevator. Restaurant supplied with the best. Horse curs, stages and elevated railroads to alldeâ€" pots. Families can live better for less money at the Grand Union Hotel than at any other ï¬rst-class hotel in the citv. A woman of a certain age is never a. wo- man whose age is certain. There was a young lady quite fair. Who had much trouble with her hair, So she bought Carboline, And a sight, to be seen, Is the head of this maiden, I d lam. egetine Two BOTTLES cum ME. San Francisco, ()ul., Ma 30, 1881. H. R. Stevens, Boston, Mass.: )ear Sirâ€"l Was alllicted with a most disagreeable rush for several months, physicians being unable to to tell me what it was. Dr. Maxwell, Dr. Mc- Lean, Dr. Hale and other well known phyei< clans in this city prescribing for me. some calling it Nettle Rash, some Eructa. some Poison Oak, and others Salt Rheum, but lull failed to give relief, and] became so bad man Icould not sleep or attend to business. Two bottles 0! Vegetine have cured me, and 1 cheerfully recommend it as the Ne Plus Ultra. of Blocd Medicines. R. F. FITZGERALD, 157 Seventh street. Canker Humor Cured. Providence, R. L. Feb. 25, 1881. Mr. 11. R. Slevens: binâ€"After trying: :1 number of remedies. was cured of the le (Junker 1111mm†hy taking several bottles of Vegctine. Yours. ' In.“ A 1) n1) AKYT‘IATJ. Halifax, N. S..I)ec.13,1881. II. It. Stevens, Esq†Boston, Mass: Dear Sinâ€"'1 take, pleasure in informing you that I have had occasion to use your well known chctine. For some time I felt rundown from too close application to business. I had only used two or three bottles of your p0 ularmedi- cine when ] felt greatly invigorate and ï¬t for almost, any kind of workin connection with our large dry goods business. My sister in England has been alling from Nervous I’rostratimr, 'J'Vant of ‘Appctite and "cm‘ral chility. I took her a bottle of Vege- tine on my last visit. and sent her half a dozen since. At last accounts she writes mo she 1 13.1-,†«LANNh chn smce. At. 131m: ubbuuuLo gnu ....... “7. , has rently nupmved, and feels as though she W011 d'soon he as well as ever. I am sure your Vogctluc would have a large sale 11) England, if immoduced into mat country. Beiicvc me yours very truly. E. '1‘. MAHON. 0f Mahon 12105., Dry Goods Merchants. Sympathy for the Nervous. . Nervous Sui-form". A dose of Vpgetine tak on Just hemch going to bed W111 msurc a. com- fortable mghL’s rest to the nervous sufferer. Vegetine 1386mm All Druggists. $ï¬,500 annual} , stock about TOSII & PET RS, Toronto. I ’ï¬trï¬â€˜vï¬t’rsm ESS‘TO‘R’S‘ATE IN CITY of 16,000 population. doing cash trade mi Lsopiaflnnuullx, 5300} about $4,500. MACKIN- “hm “ . . "AA Lummmu An“ A. W V - , i“ NESS for sale in th ing western citv oL‘ 10,000 popnl lion ; stock about, $1.400 ; in ï¬rst- elass shape MACKINTOSH 8L PETERS, Tor- onto. ERCHANT TAILOR’SnBUSINESS FOR _ sale in Torontoâ€"ï¬rst-clnss stock bought or cash about. $1.200.a11 available for spring trade.» MACKINTOSH & PETERS, Toronto. "'BUsTNéEESfEEEflEEE-s PLUMBING AND GAS EITTlNG BUSI- NESS for sale In live western town of 5,000 populatlon, havmg' 1ts gas works (Water- works now being bum): stock and tools about $1,000; rent low. MACKINTOSU. Sc PETEng, Toronto. . ILLINERY AND M ANTLE BUSINESS f0 ' sale ; a general merchant, in live western village of LL00 population, with a good country around, would sell out this branch 011 his business ; stock about $800; at 40 cents on dollar; largely available for coming season‘s trade MAQK ‘TOSH (ix PETERS. Toronto. ________._____..___i 1:.FORSTER, ARTISTJIAS RETURNED from Europe and opened a Studio, 81 King-st. East Portraits in oil life size. W._ '_.â€"_:Z;W"' __ ‘w, , PER DAY can be made by agents, male ,, 9,1? f9m19-J;.W~ DENMSEQEs’PEOa 4 HEBEK .i'l‘AVll’S.--ADDRESS R. H. COX 4,153n3r‘2tfl1= Towns); _a‘:Â¥zt£¥s,xr€wte“ WATCHER rerun ed. Tme VVOI‘k a spec ‘ ,, "MW- A: *2“: ;$.Kj1$§i}i3-;EBBE"_L CH RE; HE PL’A RD, Mnnuf‘r of Masnnic an othe Soviptv Jewels. Lflliim; 19.,1'01'0nt0 SénTi‘iBITfimerillustratcd cam \. . loguc to RYRIE, tthowc‘mr 13 Yonge Street. Tom" GARï¬isï¬Vrifloï¬mne aï¬d Easter , ma? , . . $5, or $1010ts. By post pre-paxd. H J. MA'l‘THEWgï¬ VBIV’L‘ " [‘70:ng ChowéV'Sérlbaxdï¬Ã©wfbi‘ {Nd Aï¬foéi p' 1 Album and 6 Handsome Cards for one cent stamp. TL ‘ Llagylafltgpunrr, Maw RICE LGKETS, S’HO’W " ’C’Xï¬ï¬â€™sf’ihx DO\V SHAD ES. Newest designs. Send for pricp list. F. VVXLLIARES. 4 King E.. Toronto. FOR A \VORKING MODEL . steam Enginewith lamp complete. C. POTTER. 31 King-St.. East, Toronto. ARMS IN MARYLANDâ€"IMPROVEDâ€" , $10 to $25 per acre; catalogues free. H. P. CHAMBERS. Federaliburgh, Maryland, U. S. hill‘EBIA} 7 7 - CKRF’ET‘A‘H: ,‘A "Man l .14 13v; price, (151101)le aide. sn. Egait, Toronto. NTARIO VETERlNARY COLLEGE, T0< RONTO. Students can enter from Octa- ber until January. PROF. SMITH, V. S.‘. Edin. Principal. Fees. ï¬ftv dollars. 7 . ,, UTOPHONES, $6.50, INCLUDING FOUR tunes. ’1‘. CLAXTON, dealer in Musical Instruments. Piano Music, Band Music, 8:0. Catalogues free. 197 Yonge St.. Toronto. TAGS. _ v n ,7 _7 S. WOOD 85 00., OAKVILLEâ€"MANU I FACTURERS of Outside and Inside Blinds, Sash, Doors, and Mouldings. Send for prices, Oakville. Ont. THOSE WISHING TO DISPOSE 0F Oï¬ r purchqseupuginess c any description in . A1A___‘.x A-" A“ mu"! y".th &CO.. Printa‘é, TBl'onto. "We. "W--- e -- __-, ,, _I_ purchase ubusiness of any description in the city or elsewhere should call or send parti- culars to C. J. PALIN, 53 and 55 King-street East. Business Agent and Valuer. ANADIAN MUTUAL AID ASSOCIATIIDN Co-o erative Life Assurance. Provide for families 11 case of death. W. PEMBERTON PAGE. Sec., 87 King St. West, Torento. Agents wanted. ARM FOR SALE â€"BEING LOT 106 Gwillimbury, adjoining town of Holland Landing 212 acres, Northern R. R. Station Sit- uabed on corner of this Lot, the land is high rolling clay loam Brick house ’lframe Bank Barn. J. WLG WHITNEY. Estate Agent- iérrTrdi-ontblst. Toronto. $15.25â€FQR’VTSQQQES- WUINU .5. V Aw Any person sending me 39 cents and the ad. dresses of 10 acquaintances will receive by re- turn mail goods (not recipes) that net $6.25 Tnis is an honest offer to introduce staple goodq If you want a fortune, act now. J. D. HENRY P. 0. Box 12". Buffalo. NY. ILLINERY A:Nl_) F‘AISCY GOODS BUSI: , "HARM mu" nl Vegetine in England. ï¬ï¬ildi’hg P: "M I ngL‘. CAIN E0 u E P]§éiFE§$fllNKL. lihg Pa era. wholesale and team, an at 110 )GE 8: “WILLIAMS, 4 Adel- Important. Pawn: eyelet; smoqth gurtuce ,u A, igï¬â€˜hï¬ V§EÂ¥y E632}: Sénd fo ncw_pricellist. J. G. WOODLAND .1, EDGAR CRANDALL. No. 21‘: Pcrkins Street. in-..†>ers. who I; and rc‘tail, at .‘-N . v,‘ IN'Tffï¬f